Federal Reserve and it's role in the New World Order
Here is a little article I came across today. It may be a bit extreme, or it might be right on. I don't know everything about the federal reserve, but it seems that many people are starting to get leery about our economy, well anyway, here it is, I do not know who wrote it.
This is how the U.S. Treasury would handle an economic collapse. It's called the 6900 series of protocols.
It would start with declaring a "force majeure", which would immediately be interpreted by the marketplaces as a de facto repudiation of debt. Then the SEC and the various regulatory exchanges would anticipate the market's decline, hour by hour -- when Japan's markets opened the next day, what would happen when the European markets, and all the inter-linkages of the global markets.
On the second day, US Special Forces would be dropped in by parachute in the cities where the twelve Federal Reserve district banks are located.
The origin of these protocols comes from the Department of Defense.
This is contingency planning for a variety of post-collapse scenarios.
Those scenarios would include, obviously, military collapse, WW III, and its aftermath. What we're talking about now is aftermath -- how the aftermath would be handled.
One does not necessarily know how the events would transpire that
would cause the collapse, whether it's military collapse or economic
collapse.
In WW III, it would become obvious -- when the
mushroom cloud started to appear over cities.
Economic collapse scenarios were always premised on the basis of a US
declaration of "force majeure" on debt service.
It's a very extensive scenario. The scenarios are all together, i.e. military, economic, political and social complete destabilization leading to collapse.
Then they break down individual scenarios.
In the economic collapse scenario, the starting point would be the US Treasury declaring a force majeure on debt service, which is de facto repudiation, and that's how it would be interpreted by the world's capital marketplaces. Then the scenario goes on from there.
The US Treasury would obviously declare a "force majeure" sometime after the
European markets had settled down. In other words, they had gone out on the day, which means 11:38 a.m. EDT, our time. They'd wait until the European markets closed, and the US markets had been open for a couple of hours.
That's when they'd determine how to begin the process of unwinding or controlling the collapse to the best extent possible, mainly because they know that the greatest hedge pressure would be people seeking to use other markets to hedge their long exposure in the US and that the US would be the biggest seller in all the rest of the world's markets.
Therefore you would want to declare the force majeure when the rest of the world's markets closed.
The declaration of "force majeure" would be precipitat